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Ethics panel says source of funds for mayor's trips deserved more transparency
Ethics panel says source of funds for mayor's trips deserved more transparency

Yahoo

time24-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Ethics panel says source of funds for mayor's trips deserved more transparency

Kansas City should amend its ethics code to address the transparency issues that arose when a nonprofit group under Mayor Quinton Lucas' control paid for his trip to the 2023 Super Bowl, according to a new report. The Municipal Officials and Officers Ethics Commission found nothing illegal or improper in the investigation it began after a news outlet reported that the Mayors Corps of Progress for a Greater Kansas City covered the nearly $24,000 cost of sending Lucas, an aide and his security detail to Phoenix for the game between the Chiefs and Eagles. The nonprofit was formed years ago to provide financial support to the city's mayors in their efforts to promote economic development in Kansas City. The Mayors Corps also paid to send Lucas to the Chiefs' Super Bowl appearances in 2024 and 2025. Lucas had been open about that. But as the Missouri Independent reported in December, the Mayors Corps was under no obligation to disclose the source of its funding. A whistleblower told the news organization that a business advocacy group, the Heavy Constructors Association of Greater Kansas City, had donated the money to the Mayors Corps to cover the cost of the 2023 trip. As a nonprofit formed under 501(c)(4) of the federal tax code, the Mayors Corps does not have to report the source of its funds. The ethics commission says that raises transparency issues that can undermine the public's trust in government and that other funding mechanisms should be used to pay for business trip not underwritten by taxpayers. The Independent quoted experts who said the lack of disclosure raised ethical issues and questioned whether the donation was a violation of the city ethics code that limits the amount of gifts a city official can receive to no more than $1,000 each. Lucas denied wrongdoing. He was on official business when he represented Kansas City at those Super Bowl appearances, he said, so the trips were not personal gifts. He said at the time that the financial support from the Mayors Corps relieved taxpayers from having to pay for those trips and others where his purpose was to promote the city. 'We've worked with lawyers, advisors and others to make sure that everything is on the up and up in connection with it,' Lucas told the Independent. The ethics commission's May 19 report supported the mayor's interpretation, but offered suggestions on better ways to cover the cost of future trips. Lucas said in a statement Friday that he welcomed the report's findings. But he did not say he did not promise to follow its recommendations for more transparency other than he would continue to follow city requirements. 'I thank the Ethics Commission for their work and agree with their conclusion that trip reporting complied with our rules and guidance.' he said. The Mayors Corps of Progress is not an entity with 'a substantial interest' in the city's decision making that might benefit in trying influence city policy. If it were, then the financial support would have been an ethics violation, the commission said. But in a memorandum addressed to City Council's Finance, Governance and Public Safety Committee, the commission said greater transparency is needed. The mayor's trips could have been paid for through other means that would have disclosed the Heavy Constructors' involvement, the commission said. Donors could have offered direct payments to the city that the council would have needed to approve publicly, the report said. Payments for trips also could come from the mayor's political campaign committee, the report said. While it is illegal for an official to use campaign funds for personal use, the money can go to support an officeholders official duties. And donations to those committees are publicly disclosed, unlike those to the Mayors Corps for Progress. Lucas' political action committee is another possible vehicle that could be used in the future, the commission said. 'The United We Stand PAC is reportedly associated with Mayor Lucas,' the report said. 'The Missouri Ethics Commission recognizes the propriety of spending campaign funds on expenses incurred by an office holder if the expenses are 'ordinary and necessary' to the performance of the office holder's duties.' The finance committee's next meeting is on June 3. The report asked that the committee consider amending the city code's section on gifts to public officials to reflect the report's suggestions.

Frank White recall supporters owe $150K to local polling firm
Frank White recall supporters owe $150K to local polling firm

Yahoo

time26-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Frank White recall supporters owe $150K to local polling firm

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A local group owes money to a polling firm that's collected signatures to try to get Jackson County, Missouri Democratic Executive Frank White recalled. The group is called Democracy in Action. Its Executive Director spoke to . Bridgette Williams is the Executive Director of the Heavy Constructors Association. She's the sister-in-law of Guy Howard, the Executive Director of Democracy in Action. ICE detains mother at citizenship appointment in Kansas City, family says Friday, County Executive Frank White wouldn't comment on this issue. Williams said Democracy in Action owed the polling firm co/efficient about $150,000 to get the signatures released from them, so they can send them in to the Kansas City and Jackson County Election Boards. 'Democracy in Action's trying to raise the money,' Williams said. 'There are many people out there that would normally contribute that are afraid of retaliation from the County Executive if it becomes known that they've contributed.' Friday, Williams said the same thing Howard told FOX4 in December. They were not going to disclose who their donors are because they don't have to as a 501(c)(4). 'They are gun-shy,' Williams said of the donors. 'There are things that happened with the Mayor's 501 (c)4 where contributors were released, and so there is a fear. We are not that kind of organization.' Williams was talking about the Mayor's Corps of Progress for a Greater Kansas City. It faced scrutiny at the end of 2024 and at the beginning of this year when it became public that Mayor Quinton Lucas used money in that entity to pay for his trips to the Super Bowl. In March, White said the recall effort had to do with the fact that he was on the 'vote no' side when it came to the stadium election in April of 2024. Williams' entity, on the other hand, was on the 'vote yes' side. 'I'm not going to deny those stadiums will put people to work and will continue to keep people working,' Williams said. 'And will benefit the Heavies,' FOX4 interjected. 'And will benefit the construction industry as a whole,' she followed up. 'However, Frank White has proven that he does not care about what these increases in property taxes will do to the citizens.' Wednesday, Republican Legislator Sean Smith told FOX4 that once Democracy in Action sends in those signatures, they'll have more than the 42,900 number needed to get closer to a recall election. That day, Smith also said Democracy in Action had collected about 29,000 signatures. There's no word when the group will get the money necessary to release the signatures. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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